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Cyrus Kurtz Holliday

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Cyrus Kurtz Holliday Veteran

Birth
Carlisle, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
29 Mar 1900 (aged 73)
Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, USA
Burial
Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.0408516, Longitude: -95.6532822
Plot
Section 8
Memorial ID
View Source
Cyrus K. Holliday
Kansas' 5th Adjutant General
May 02, 1864 – March 31, 1865
Mayor of Topeka

Col. Cyrus K. Holliday, one of the founders of Topeka, and father of the Santa Fe Railroad, was born near Carlisle, Pennsylvania on April 3, 1826.

Holliday was educated at Alleghant College, Meadville, Pennsylvania, for the legal profession, which he followed to some extent, although his natural taste seemed to be for large business undertakings. His knowledge of law and his talents as a public speaker gave him a splendid equipment. His first important business venture was as a contractor for the construction of a short line of railroad in his native state, on which he realized a profit of $20,000.

Holliday came to Kansas and settled in Lawrence in 1854. He took an active interest in the free state movement and believed that Kansas would become a free state. He, with some of his friends, determined on the site of Topeka for their new town which they intended to be a permanent capital of the new state. Holliday was the first president of the Topeka Town Company. He continued to direct the affairs of the company until all of the lots were disposed of and when the company went out of business, Holliday was made trustee for the purpose of curing all defects of title. Many of the lots remained in his name up to the time of his death, and for many years he was the largest individual taxpayer in Topeka.
His greatest satidfaction and his most enduring fame resulted from his connection with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, of which he was the inspiration, promoter, builder, first president and director from the date of its organization. He firmly believed in its ultimate sucess, while others ridiculed what they thought a preposterous idea.

Holliday was the first Mayor of Topeka and later was recalled to that position for several terms.

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Founding father of Topeka. He also founded Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. He added Santa Fe to the name as a marketing ploy, not knowing if railroad would go to Santa Fe.

Son of David Holliday and Mary Kennedy. Married to Mary Dillon Jones on 11 Jun 1854 in Meadville, Crawford Co, PA. Arrived in Kansas in November 1854, first going to Lawrence, and then moving west along the Kaw River to the spot which became Topeka, Kansas. He was elected the president of the Topeka Town Association; was an adjutant general during the Civil War; and was elected to the State Senate. His 1854 diary is now available to read on the Kansas Memory website.
Additional bio info: Becky Doan (46821009)
Cyrus K. Holliday
Kansas' 5th Adjutant General
May 02, 1864 – March 31, 1865
Mayor of Topeka

Col. Cyrus K. Holliday, one of the founders of Topeka, and father of the Santa Fe Railroad, was born near Carlisle, Pennsylvania on April 3, 1826.

Holliday was educated at Alleghant College, Meadville, Pennsylvania, for the legal profession, which he followed to some extent, although his natural taste seemed to be for large business undertakings. His knowledge of law and his talents as a public speaker gave him a splendid equipment. His first important business venture was as a contractor for the construction of a short line of railroad in his native state, on which he realized a profit of $20,000.

Holliday came to Kansas and settled in Lawrence in 1854. He took an active interest in the free state movement and believed that Kansas would become a free state. He, with some of his friends, determined on the site of Topeka for their new town which they intended to be a permanent capital of the new state. Holliday was the first president of the Topeka Town Company. He continued to direct the affairs of the company until all of the lots were disposed of and when the company went out of business, Holliday was made trustee for the purpose of curing all defects of title. Many of the lots remained in his name up to the time of his death, and for many years he was the largest individual taxpayer in Topeka.
His greatest satidfaction and his most enduring fame resulted from his connection with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, of which he was the inspiration, promoter, builder, first president and director from the date of its organization. He firmly believed in its ultimate sucess, while others ridiculed what they thought a preposterous idea.

Holliday was the first Mayor of Topeka and later was recalled to that position for several terms.

——————————-

Founding father of Topeka. He also founded Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. He added Santa Fe to the name as a marketing ploy, not knowing if railroad would go to Santa Fe.

Son of David Holliday and Mary Kennedy. Married to Mary Dillon Jones on 11 Jun 1854 in Meadville, Crawford Co, PA. Arrived in Kansas in November 1854, first going to Lawrence, and then moving west along the Kaw River to the spot which became Topeka, Kansas. He was elected the president of the Topeka Town Association; was an adjutant general during the Civil War; and was elected to the State Senate. His 1854 diary is now available to read on the Kansas Memory website.
Additional bio info: Becky Doan (46821009)

Bio by: Ginny M



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  • Created by: Ginny M
  • Added: Jun 21, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6532533/cyrus_kurtz-holliday: accessed ), memorial page for Cyrus Kurtz Holliday (3 Apr 1826–29 Mar 1900), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6532533, citing Topeka Cemetery, Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, USA; Maintained by Ginny M (contributor 253).